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Example sentences for "chyle"

Lexicographically close words:
chwang; chyde; chyld; chylde; chyldren; chylopoietic; chylous; chyme; chymic; chymical
  1. To arrange or dispose in a certain form, figure, or shape.

  2. Thy correspondence of the internal viscera of the body, especially of the stomach, thymus gland, the receptacle and ducts of the chyle and lacteals, and of the mesentery (n.

  3. Thus conveying its baneful properties by this active vehicle, chyle to the blood, rendering it foetid, discoloured and by and by, often as difficult to be named in its adulterated state as the composition which gave rise to it.

  4. Like animal chyle 411 Light occasions the actions of vegetable muscles.

  5. But does not the chyle answer this purpose?

  6. The blood, therefore, after supplying its various secretions, becomes loaded with an excess of carbon, which is carried off by respiration; and the formation of new chyle from the food affords a constant supply of carbonaceous matter.

  7. A small vessel or tube of animal bodies for conveying chyle from the intestine to the thoracic duct.

  8. The CHYLE and residual matter are moved over the mucous surface of the small intestine, by the action of its muscular coat.

  9. The absorption of the chyle by the lacteals, and its transfer through them and the thoracic duct, into the subclavian vein at the lower part of the neck.

  10. In this vein the chyle is mixed with the venous fluid.

  11. Well-prepared chyme is the natural stimulus of the duodenum, liver, and pancreas; pure chyle is the appropriate excitant of the lacteal vessels.

  12. This state of the chyle may be produced by the food being improper in quantity or quality, or by its being taken in an improper manner, at an improper time, and when the system is not prepared for it.

  13. The fluid in these cavities consists of the chyle incorporated with the impure blood.

  14. The blood may be made impure, by the chyle being deficient in quantity or defective in quality.

  15. As the chyle supplies the blood with the newly vitalized particles of matter, there is, consequently, an increased demand for food.

  16. This will not only cause disease of the digestive organs, but chyle will not be formed, to nourish the system.

  17. The large veins that convey the blood and chyle to the heart.

  18. All this process, thus far, may go on naturally enough, and yet the chyle may not be well formed, and the chymous mass may find its way out of the system without answering any of the purposes of nutrition.

  19. They may even reduce it to chyle; but chyle is not blood.

  20. They may dissolve it, but that is not making good chyle of it.

  21. No doubt both Aristotle and Galen had seen its ruddy contents; at any rate both had concluded that the chyle was changed within the portal vein into a crude approximation to blood.

  22. So in the dissected mesenteric veins we do not find chyme or chyle and blood, separate or mingled, but only blood, sensibly the same in color and consistency as in the rest of the veins.

  23. Nor need we hold the improbable belief that two inconveniently opposed movements take place in the whole capillary ramification, namely, movement of the chyle upward, of the blood downward.

  24. In the stomach there occurs an acid ferment, which forms the chyle with the sulphur of the aliments: this chyle enters into effervescence in the heart, because the salt and sulphur take fire together.

  25. The lymphatics, or absorbents, are the vessels which carry the lymph and chyle in the blood.

  26. The lymphatics which proceed from the intestines convey the chyle into the blood during digestion.

  27. Marcel de Serres is of opinion that it is secreted from the chyle by passing through the pores of the dorsal vessel, formerly called the heart of insects[700].

  28. He then asks by which of the viscera is the fat elaborated, or by what means does the chyle which transudes from the intestinal canal pass to the state of fat?

  29. In insects, he observes, that undergo metamorphoses, in which the growth or development of parts is often very rapid, it is requisite that a considerable portion of the chyle should be in reserve for this purpose.

  30. Perhaps one of the uses of Sleep, and of the horizontal posture during that period--may be to facilitate the introduction of Chyle into the Blood.

  31. According to the force of the Chylopoetic Organs, a larger or less quantity of Chyle may be abstracted from the same quantity of Food.

  32. The Thoracic Duct is the principal trunk of the absorbent system, and the canal through which much of the chyle and lymph is conveyed to the blood.

  33. The fact that lymph and chyle are both conveyed into the general current of circulation, leads to the inference that the lymph, as well as the chyle, aids in the process of nutrition.

  34. While the chyle is propelled along the small intestine by the peristaltic action, the matter which it contains in solution is absorbed in the usual manner into the vessels of the villi by the process called osmosis.

  35. A canal which carries the chyle from its repository in the abdomen to the large vein in the chest, near the heart.

  36. From this reservoir the chyle and lymph flow into the thoracic duct, through which they are conveyed to the left subclavian vein, there to be mingled with venous blood.

  37. The chyle does not represent the entire product of digestion, but only the fatty substances suspended in a serous fluid.

  38. The structure of the spleen and that of the mesenteric glands are similar, although the former is provided with a scanty supply of lymphatic vessels, and the chyle does not pass through it, as through the mesenteric glands.

  39. As the chyle does not become assimilated to the blood until it has passed through the lungs, this term, which signifies blood-making, is not unaptly used.

  40. The chyle is not prepared to impart nourishment to the system until this change takes place.

  41. After the chyle is separated from the chyme and passes into the circulation, the indigestible and refuse portion of the food, which is incapable of nourishing the system, passes off through the intestinal canal.

  42. By this process, both the chyle and the venous blood are converted into red, arterial, or nutritive blood, which is afterward distributed by the heart through the arteries, to supply nourishment and support to every part of the body.

  43. The chyle is then taken up by the absorbent vessels, which are extensively ramified over the inner membrane or lining of the bowels.

  44. Here the chyle is poured into the general current of the venous blood, and, mingling with it, is exposed to the action of the air in the lungs during respiration.

  45. It is separated in the intestines into chyle and excrement.

  46. Consisting of chyle much diluted with water; -- said of a liquid which forms the circulating fluid of some inferior animals.

  47. A morbid condition in which the urine contains chyle or fatty matter, giving it a milky appearance.

  48. The act or process by which chyle is formed from food in animal bodies; chylification, -- a digestive process.

  49. To make chyle of; to be converted into chyle.

  50. Instead of chyle his organs must have distilled some virulent poison; he was always at his worst in his after dinner hours.

  51. Ingested food, passing down the alimentary tract, was absorbed as chyle from the intestine, collected by the portal vessel, and conveyed by it to the liver.

  52. The eggs hatch out into larvae, which require constant attention from the workers, who feed them with the chyle or bee-bread already mentioned.

  53. It is then partly digested by the nurses with honey, so that a sort of chyle is formed.

  54. If the turbidity is owing to the urate it will disappear; if to chyle it will remain.

  55. When amorphous urates are uniformly distributed throughout the urine they give it a milky appearance, which may sometimes lead to its being mistaken for chylous urine, or urine throughout which fatty particles of chyle are diffused.

  56. Sanguification; the conversion of chyle into blood.

  57. One of the lymphatic vessels which convey chyle from the small intestine through the mesenteric glands to the thoracic duct; a chyliferous vessel.

  58. Much of the chyle is dead before it enters the great thoracic duct and goes to the lungs without enough pure blood to sustain life.

  59. If blood or chyle is kept too long below the diaphragm, it becomes diseased before it reaches the lungs, and after renovation, but little good blood is left.

  60. In this stage the patient is low in flesh and feeble generally, because of trouble with blood and chyle to pass normally through the diaphragm.

  61. This Juice serves to cause the Chyle to ferment with the Choler, in order to remove the grosser Particles from those that ought to enter into the Lacteal Vessels.

  62. Because the thin are smaller, being appointed only to transport the Chyle out of the Stomach into the Reserver; whereas the thick are more large and stronger, serving to carry forth the gross Excrements out of the Belly.

  63. No chyliferous vessels have been found in crustaceans, whence one may conclude that the chyle leaves the intestine by oozing from it, just as it does in insects.

  64. The irregular intervals which separate the organs, more numerous here, are enclosed by membranes, between which the venous blood pours, and naturally the chyle also.

  65. Here everything is done at full gallop, and the chyle has not to go far before it is absorbed.

  66. Well, then, the chyle has only to penetrate through these coats, to go where it is wanted.

  67. We men have chyliferous vessels which draw up chyle from the intestines and throw it within a short distance of the heart, into the torrent of blood, where its education is completed.

  68. Having been acted upon by the mesenteric glands, and passed through them, the chyle flows onward until it is poured into a dilated reservoir for the chyle, known as the receptaculum chyli.

  69. The chyle is propelled along the intestine by the worm-like contractions of its muscular walls.


  70. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "chyle" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.